-
Recent Posts
Archives
Recent Comments
Meta
Monthly Archives: April 2011
More Compelling Than Fantasy Football
Two weeks ago at the bottom of my post, Trends, I began to explore the issues of self-publishing in a most elementary fashion. Stephen Ramsay’s Open Access Publishing and Scholarly Values (part two) and the extensive comments following his post explosively … Continue reading
Posted in Digital Humanities Posts
1 Comment
Passages
The transformations that Walter Breuning witnessed in his 114 years are staggering, yet he remained staunchly pr0-change. His life story provides opportunity for reflection about Cronon’s comments on neighborliness, decency and mutual respect. Of course, quick highlights of his long life … Continue reading
Posted in Digital Humanities Posts
2 Comments
Sifting and Winnowing
This week our task is to to explore and reflect on the nature of the web — the digital — as an open forum for knowledge production, communication, and consumption. A Few Interesting Finds Along the Way: I. Digital Debate The turmoil … Continue reading
Posted in Digital Humanities Posts
4 Comments
Photos-back at you Kristina!
At the end of Harry Roberts article about typography he listed three sample websites worthy of note for their beauty. The second, Khoi Vinh’s has a plethora of categories about an incredible variety of subjects (including 299 post on technology). … Continue reading
Posted in Digital Humanities Posts
Leave a comment
Trends
I am mid-paper, writing about education in New England in the antebellum period and the confusing whirl between the “common school movement” that advocated the importance of access to education regardless of socioeconomic as a tool for advancing the moral, … Continue reading
Posted in Digital Humanities Posts
1 Comment
Flow
Yesterday I went to a national conference focused on implementing community and active learning in the college freshmen seminar using a learning system, “On Course.” One of the sessions was on a study by a Stanford psychologist Carol Dweck that … Continue reading
Posted in Digital Humanities Posts
1 Comment